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    Houston Home Tour

    New Museum District home blends classic and contemporary design

    Karen Egly-Thompson, Houzz
    Nov 11, 2016 | 11:10 am
    Houzz Houston house home classic contemporary Museum District
    The master bathroom features a light palette with a punch of dark from a custom walnut vanity.
    Photo by Peter Mollick, Houzz

    Few places offer space to spread out like Texas. This Houston couple took full advantage of that with a spacious new home built in the city’s famed Museum District. Gorgeous classic-meets-contemporary materials and furnishings fill large rooms, giving the stately home an intimate feel. Meanwhile, large windows and an inset porch off the kitchen offer deep connections to the outdoors.

    The exterior walls are a mix of painted brick, stucco, and bleached mahogany, topped by a Vermont slate tile roof. “The whole house was designed to let the outdoors in,” says designer Shannon Mann of Mann Designs. Where possible, windows and doors were designed to run the full height of the wall. Like vertical ribbons, mahogany planking fills in space between the windows.

    An inset porch off the kitchen provides a shady retreat in which to sit — or swing — and leads to a saltwater pool. The windows connecting the porch to the main house retract to open the space to the breakfast room and kitchen.

    Two Kettal Maia Egg Swing chairs hang at the far end of the pool just off the living room. Pennsylvania bluestone surrounds the French Gray pool tile, which renders the typical bright turquoise pool color a dreamier hue. Invisible features include a built-in floor cleaning system for the pool and a below-ground 15,000-gallon rainwater collection tank for irrigation.

    Tour Another Transitional Home Like This One

    The kitchen-dining area opens to the porch. Stone flooring has been carried throughout the spaces for continuity. There’s an oval breakfast table with a zinc top and a steel base, as well as custom curvy armchairs covered in a metallic leather. A fun asymmetrical island light fixture breaks up the geometry a bit.

    Mann designed the island with an integral single sink, a dishwasher, a food warming drawer, drawer storage, and hidden storage for sponges. Flush-mount appliance panels blend into the surrounding wenge wood veneer base.

    Mann found four antique hickory beams, had them milled down, and combined them to create a raised breakfast bar surface. Quartzite on the main countertop has touches of brown and gray and pulls the scheme together.

    Mann also custom-designed the kitchen cabinets. A flat-edge beaded detail on the cabinet doors adds a traditional touch while maintaining a clean look. A TV sits in a niche above the refrigerator. Gray grout provides contrast to the 2-by-8-inch glazed brick backsplash.

    A walnut plank wall opposite the front entry forms part of the nucleus of the house and delineates the respective spaces. This wall creates an entry and a gallery hallway and separates the living room from the entrance and kitchen. The other side of the wall houses the powder room and home automation systems.

    Ample natural light brings out the textures in the living room, like the velvet sofa upholstery and walls finished with Diamond plaster, which is color-tinted plaster hand-troweled onto drywall a quarter-inch thick. It creates a softness and depth not achievable with regular paint.

    A large coffee table made of walnut, rosewood, and brass creates a focal point of visual warmth. Mann designed the table with Studio Lifestyle. She also had the sofas custom-made. In the corner, an antique Jacobean-style armchair easily blends with the contemporary furnishings. “The mixing of styles and periods always feels a bit more collected and interesting,” Mann says.

    To contrast the light walls and tie into other walnut components in the home, Mann chose wide-planked walnut wood flooring for most of the space.

    Install Walnut Wood Flooring in Your Home

    Like elsewhere in the home, the dining room furniture is a mix of genres: A traditional dining table joins contemporary leather chairs. The chandelier, a vintage French find, nods to the living room’s origami-patterned sofa pillows.

    Light-colored linen draperies provide contrast to the dark trim and bespoke plaster walls. Although subtle, the drapery fabric features a jacquard-woven ikat pattern and adds an extra scoop of opulence.

    Add an Element of Elegance to Your Dining Room

    Mann embraced contrast for the master bedroom decor. Light bleached oak on the ceiling creates a restful spirit. Jockeying lights and darks, the dark walnut bed frame stands silhouetted against the light plaster walls. Sculptural ebonized walnut nightstands and velvet-upholstered armchairs add luxury and a bit of sheen. For balance, a pair of ceramic table lamps have a flat glaze. Linen-look draperies add a natural, nubby texture. Touches of deep blue appear in artwork and decorative pillows.

    The master bathroom features a light palette with a punch of dark from a custom walnut vanity. With inset linear pulls on the vanity front, there’s no protruding hardware to interfere with circulation or someone’s leaning in toward the custom mirrored wall. For continuity of the mirror plane, Mann designed electrical outlets on the inside of the integrated medicine cabinets.

    Marble floor tiles laid in a herringbone pattern draw the eye inward and around the soaking tub, which is clad in a massive slab of marble.

    The master bathroom features a light palette with a punch of dark from a custom walnut vanity.

    Houzz Houston house home classic contemporary Museum District
    Photo by Peter Mollick, Houzz
    The master bathroom features a light palette with a punch of dark from a custom walnut vanity.
    houzz
    news/home-design

    gold pony club

    Inside the creation of the rodeo cook-off’s most over-the-top tent

    Emily Cotton
    Feb 27, 2026 | 12:30 pm
    Cotton Q Club rodeo tent 2026
    Courtesy of Cotton Holdings
    The Gold Pony is the ultra-private VIP lounge behind the stage.

    The Cotton Q Club is arguably the glitziest and most exclusive tent at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo’s annual World's Championship Bar-B-Que Contest. Hosting nearly 800 invited guests-per-night, the 5,000-square-foot space includes a 50-foot bar, a new pop-up martini bar by Sophie Cocktail & Terrace Bar called “The Stirrup,” the ultra-exclusive “Gold Pony Club,” and a full stage for private concerts. This season, county music acts include Gabby Barrett, Sammy Kershaw, Josh Turner and Braxton Keith.

    Aside from the obvious, what sets the club apart from the rest is the sheer magnitude of its operation. Once inside, guests are encapsulated by velvet-draped ceilings illuminated by crystal chandeliers, three-layer tartan-topped carpeting, richly-colored wooden-paneled walls, plus thousands of red roses swathed acrobatically throughout.

    To coincide with the year of the horse, five enormous ponies made entirely of red roses have been suspended from the ceilings. The second additions this year hang on either side of the bar in The Gold Pony, the club’s even more exclusive VIP area. The kinetic artworks were created by Houston artist Sneha Merchant —all for a three day fête. This begs the question: how do they do it?

    Cotton Holdings and its subsidiaries are well positioned to carry out the entire project themselves — so they do. Never bothered or besmirched by the possibility of running into issues with rental companies, everything at The Cotton Q Club is procured, purchased, and stored in-house. As one would expect from a company that provides disaster relief around the world.

    “There is a lot of love and care put into this because we’re not in a hotel, we’re not in someone’s home,” Cotton Holdings chief marketing officer Zinat Ahmed tells CultureMap. “So for us to be able to create this entire infrastructure under a tent — down to the walls and chandeliers — it is much more than throwing a party. It’s about the details that make people feel that they are at a hotel, they are in an extravagant room, they are at The Polo Bar.”

    Ahmed notes that a lot of the company’s culture is mixed into the tent, such as what Cotton does as a disaster relief company (including providing food by Cotton Culinary).

    “Cotton Logistics puts up tents during a natural disaster. Seeing the Cotton team, whether it’s cleaning or moving things around, welcoming everyone, that’s part of our Cotton GDS — we restore communities after natural disasters. Our synergies in different parts of our day-to-day are here,” she says.

    Ahmed’s team has complete creative control over the interior aesthetics of the club. Always sourcing anything that cannot be made in-house to local vendors is something she feels is important. Nothing is rented, not even the furniture or accessories.

    “Every single thing, unless it was done by a local vendor, was done in-house: design, signage, execution — even the embroidery,” she explains

    Everything is checked over during the summer months so there won’t be any surprises when the cook-off comes back around. Every item is organized, labeled, and stored either in Cotton’s warehouses, Conex boxes, or in special climate-controlled safes — down to the matchboxes.

    “We are always prepared and ready to go,” explains Ahmed. “It’s not chaotic at all because we’re used to it — it’s a normal day at Cotton.”

    When asked for her favorite parts of the tent this year, Ahmed readily answered that it has to be the five rose ponies in the main area of the club. Secondly, the two commissioned works by Sneha Merchant. Sprinkled in diamond dust, one is a female mallard wrapped in a boa, champagne flute in hand, while the other is a smartly-suited jackalope complete with cowboy hat and martini.

    Both pieces are lit by antique sconces Ahmed sourced from Round Top, while the taxidermy Zebra heads are on loan from the Columbus, Texas ranch of Cotton Holdings’ Chairman Pete Bell.

    “Every detail, down to the swatches of velvet has been thought of with a lot of love and care,” says Ahmed. “You use that mindset with something like this. So, if you have a mindset like before you deploy to a hurricane, you can do it for the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo.”

    Cotton Q Club rodeo tent 2026

    Courtesy of Cotton Holdings

    The Gold Pony is the ultra-private VIP lounge behind the stage.

    houston livestock show and rodeohome-designcotton holdings
    news/home-design
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